Sherlock Holmes - The
Golden Years, on Amazon and Audible, just hit the 100 mark. A great new
voice talent, Richard Di Britannia, has brought his amazing skills to bear as
one of the best “Holmes voices” ever. But
he also shows his amazing range and versatility all 70 characters in the book.
Hello Sherlock Holmes Fans! This blog, written by Kim Krisco, author of The Magnificent Madness of Tessa Wiggins, The Celtic Phoenix, Irregular Lives, and Sherlock Holmes-The Golden Years. The untold story of Holmes's protege, and how she came to follow in his footsteps is an amazing story , , , that keeps unfolding. Check out all Kim's books at Amazon, and most bookstores.
Wednesday, August 10, 2016
Monday, August 1, 2016
NEW HOLMES BOOK COMING!
Irregular Lives: The untold story of
Sherlock Holmes and Baker-street irregulars will be published in November,
along with the kindle edition and audiobook. It’s an unusual novel in that,
within the larger tale, there are five stand-alone tales--each featuring one of
the irregulars:
·
WIGGINS: A
lad who learned too well the lessons that the street taught.
· UGLY: Adopted
and raised by the costers of the Spitalfields Market.
·
SNAPE: A
blacksmith’s son, who forged a life from
the rubbish in the Thames.
·
KATE
& ARCHIE: Orphaned at the age of six, Kate found a family and made her
way with ARCHIE. And . . .
·
BENJIE: A
boy about the business of life on the streets—where everything is for sale.
Holmesian fans will know something of Wiggans, who appeared
in three of Doyle’s stories but, until now, no one has introduced the other
irregulars.
Of course, all or the shorter tales take place between 1884
and 1898, when Sherlock Holmes was in his prime. Irregular Lives takes place in
1919, just after the WWI has ended. Holmes and Watson are in retirement at ages
65 and 66 respectively, and the irregulars are in their mid to late thirties.
While several decades have passed, the irregulars have not lost their
propensity for getting in trouble.
Friday, July 15, 2016
Sherlock Holmes on Stage
Following in the footsteps of Conan Doyle, I have chosen a
two-act play to be my next contribution to the ever-expanding canon (I’m
currently wrapping up my novel Irregular
Lives - coming out in the fall.). As is my style and custom, this new
project has begun with research. It would not be surprising, then, to learn
that my research began with the one Sherlock Holmes play that Doyle is credited with--entitled: Sherlock Holmes.
I italicized “credited” since this play is more the work of
actor William Gillette than Conan Doyle. American theatrical producer Charles
Frohman attempted to buy the rights from Conan Doyle. While Doyle
did not relinquish the rights, it did inspire him to write a five-act play
featuring Holmes and Professor Moriarty. As you can imagine, a
five-act play would have been tedious, and likely too elaborate to produce on
tour. Frohman’s feedback to Doyle included an observation that actor William
Gillette would make an ideal Holmes. Doyle followed up on Frohman’s suggestion,
and in the end, Gillette wrote what amounted to a new two-act play.
Holmesian fans would quickly recognized dialogue from the
play that was lifted straight from several of Doyle’s stories: A Scandal in
Bohemia, The Final Problem and A Study in
Scarlet.
The plot is a rather “plain vanilla Holmes tale” in which
Holmes is pitted against Moriarty. It involves helping a beautiful, young woman
who seeks to revenge on a royal personage who wronged her in a love affair
(think A Scandal in Bohemia). Her sister, who died of a broken heart had keep
letters and photos of a nobleman who now wants them back. Moriarty and his
gang, seeing a great opportunity for blackmail, attempt to steal the
incriminating evidence from the young woman.
The play opened in New York City
on November of 1899, and ran there for 260 performances across the U.S. It then moved to London's Lyceum Theatre in September 1901
where is ran for nearly 200 performances in various theaters in the UK.
Thereafter, it was revived, from time to time, by William Gillette over the
next decade.
It is well known by Holmes aficionados that, in the entire
60-story canon, Holmes never says: "Elementary,
my dear Watson,” however, it does appear in this play. This would explain the
persistence and popularity of what some might say is the most famous of
Holmes’s lines. It was also Gillette who introduced the famous curved
meerschaum pipe.
The two-act comedy Sherlock
Holmes is a quick read -- thank heaven. If I had to rate it today, I would
give it only two or three stars. From a plot standpoint, it does not measure up
to most of Doyle’s stories, and the dialogue is flat and predicable. All that
aside, it was the ending that caught me off-guard. Holmes, having only seen the
young heroin on two occasions (scenes) before the last scene, declares his love
to her in Watson’s company. The finals curtain falls with Holmes kissing his
new love “on the mouth.”
There are other Sherlock Holmes plays out there, and I will
undoubtedly read all of them. But at this early stage, I can only say that the
Doyle-Gillette play has inspired me to dive, wholeheartedly, into my new
project with the hope that I might do a better job of bringing Sherlock Holmes
to the stage.
Wednesday, July 6, 2016
The irregulars: The Untold Story
Within
the 60 Holmes in the original canon, the urban army known at the Baker Street
irregulars appear only three times: In two novels, A Study In
Scarlet and The Sign of
the Four, and later in The Adventure
of the Crooked Man.
In
these stories, the irregulars were led by an boy called Wiggins, whom Holmes paid
a shilling
per day plus expenses, with a guinea prize (worth one pound
and one shilling) for a vital clue. It was clear that there were many boys
within the irregulars, and possible a girl, but none of the others were
distinguished in Doyle’s writing. As an emerging Holmes scholar, it seemed
likely to me that the irregulars played a larger role in Holmes’s
investigations, and is life -- particularly as Holmes aged. In my next book: Irregular Lives: The Untold Story of
Sherlock Holmes’s Urban Army, I explore the singular adventures that Holmes
and the irregulars shared over several decades.
You
will, of course, find Wiggans, but also the other, previously unnamed members
to street Arabs like Ugly, Snape, Archie, Kate, Ruck, and Tessa -- Wiggans’s
little sister. This book will wrap a series of vignettes in a larger tale that
unfolds just after WWI, when Holmes is 65 years old.
Irregular Lives: The Untold Story of
Sherlock Holmes’s Urban Army not only makes for some exciting mysteries and
adventures, but also gives the reader a peak at what was called “Darkest
England”-- the one million desperately poor residents of London in 1919. These
retched people comprised 15 percent of the city’s population. Ironically, today
London’s poor represent an even greater portion of the population. Not much
progress in one hundred years.
My
hope is that this newest book will be out in the fall. In the meanwhile, if you
haven’t already done so, you might check out Sherlock Holmes the Golden Years – on AMAZON where you can get a
peak at some of the irregulars who will reappear in my new book. BTW: Sherlock
Holmes the Golden Years is now available as a wonderful new audiobook!
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Whose portrays the best Sherlock Holmes?
Sherlock Holmes - The
Golden Years is now available as an audiobook. A great new voice talent,
Richard Di Britannia, produces one of the best “Holmes voices” I have ever
heard. But, more than this, Richard’s dramatic range, and versatility, breathes
new life into the five-part saga that boasts over seventy characters.
Audible, who publishes the audiobook has selected a sample.
And, while not the most action-backed sample segment, it does offer the
opportunity to hear Richard’s marvelous voice:
This story sample comes from the third story in the
collection, The Maestro of Mysteries. It describes a meeting between Holmes
and Miss Irene Adler that eventually leads to her joining in the chase for the
diabolical Ciarán Malastier who haunts all five stories.
Sherlock Holmes - The
Golden Years audiobook is available on AMAZON.
Monday, June 20, 2016
Sherlock Holmes and the Suffragettes
Sherlock Holmes’s relationship with the ladies has always
been a point of curiosity for fans. He has always shown respect for certain
feminine weaknesses and, at the same time he was slow to embrace female
strengths. His lifestyle and work
enabled him to walk this line. However, in Sherlock
Holmes - The Golden Years, he could not help but confront some formidable
ladies in the streets, as the suffrage movement was in full swing in 1913. With a major election cycle underway in the
United States, I thought a post about women’s suffrage was appropriate --
particularly as the women’s vote will be so critical in the coming presidential
election.
While the women’s suffrage movement in the United Kingdom
began about 1872, with the formation of the National Society for Women’s
Suffrage, it didn’t make the daily headlines until the early 1900’s when the
movement became more militant and violent.
WWI caused a temporary halt to suffrage activity and, in
1918, the Representation of the Peoples Act granted women limited voting
rights. However, it wasn’t until 1928 when all women in Britain gained full
voting rights. Women in the U.S. gained the right to vote eight years earlier,
in 1920.
One of the key figures in Britain’s suffrage movement was Emmeline Pankhurst, who is one of
several infamous historical characters that can be found in Sherlock Holmes-The Golden Years.
In the Curse of the Black Feather, Holmes and Watson
meet Emmeline Pankhurst at a party where Watson has the dubious honour of
escorting her to dinner. Holmes,
however, had a much more fascinating dinner partner that evening – Irene Adler,
“the woman” who mysteriously reappears his life and haunts him in all five of
the stories in this 345-page collection.
In Sherlock Holmes-The
Golden Years the reader gets all the mystery and magic of Holmes at his
best, interesting real-life historical characters, and a rich and highly
accurate historical background, all of which adds great depth to the stories. Available at AMAZON as soft cover, Kindle and audiobook.
Would that Holmes could take the mystery out of the U.S.
Presidential Election.
Saturday, June 4, 2016
A New Voice for Sherlock Holmes
Sherlock Holmes - The
Golden Years will soon be available as an audiobook. A great new voice
talent, Richard Di Britannia, has brought his amazing skills to bear. He not
only produces one of the best “Holmes voices” I have ever heard, but shows his
range and versatility as he interprets over 70 characters in the book.
Below is a sample taken from the first story in the
collection -- A Bonnie Bag of Bones:
In this saga, the infamous duo is led on a not-so-merry
chase into the mythical mountains of Scotland, and ultimately to the “the
woman” who is tangled
within a mystery that has haunted Holmes for a quarter century.
In the clip below, Watson has just arrived at Holmes’s retirement
cottage in Sussex Downs after receiving a terse telegram from Holmes that
chided him for a recent mythological story he published about a creature call
the Grey Man of Ben Macdhui.
CLICK on the screen above to hear Richard Di Britiannia interpretation of
Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson in a post-retirement conversation.
As soon as the 10-1/2 hour audiobook is out, information and
links will be posted. If you are interested in a hard copy version of this
collection of stories, you can buy it on AMAZON and most other bookstores.
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